Candice Lin
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Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.This sculpture depicts an open book with intricately carved and sculpted pages, creating a visually striking and thought-provoking piece. The muted color palette of white, gray, and red accentuates the delicate, almost ethereal quality of the work. The artist has skillfully employed negative space and intricate carving techniques to transform the pages into a mesmerizing sculptural form that appears to defy the traditional boundaries of the book format. This piece invites the viewer to contemplate the relationship between the written word, the physical book, and the realm of artistic expression, encouraging a deeper engagement with the act of reading and the power of the written medium. ...
Similar Artworks
Candice Lin
1979 , AmericanCandice Lin works among multidisciplinary media, such as sculpture and video, which explores complex themes of cultural, gender, and racial disparities, uncontrolled sexualities, and non-normative behavior. Her work critiques the permeable nature of delineations, employing transformative materials to highlight the fluidity of boundaries: a sculptural tableau of a tar-coated cornfield seamlessly transitioning into a hirsute, black pig, digital reinterpretations of Mapplethorpe’s Black Book nudes metamorphosed into Martian geological forms, and a life-sized cockroach with an iridescent, spaceship-like shell punctuated with silicone vaginas, oozing suggestively. Lin's work orbits the themes of the fluidity and malleability of the boundaries between the self and the other. It further scrutinizes how Western ideologies of self-identity exert influence on power dynamics inherent within conceptions of individualism, selfhood, liberty, and differentiation. Through her exploration of marginalized histories and the legacies of colonialism, along with the materials that bridge them, her work threads together disparate narratives of migration, biological warfare, and the colonial relationships of Britain and America with China. ...
Candice Lin: Artworks
Commonwealth and Council
Los Angeles, Mexico CityCommonwealth and Council is a gallery in Koreatown, Los Angeles founded in 2010. Our program is rooted in our commitment to explore how a community of artists can sustain our co-existence through generosity and hospitality. Commonwealth and Council celebrates our manifold identities and experiences through the shared dialogue of art—championing practices by women, queer, POC, and our ally artists to build counter-histories that reflect our individual and collective realities.